Friday, September 12, 2014

With CPAM creating strong
awareness among farming communities, many of them not only pledged to reduce
pesticide use, but also wanted to move towards farming without chemicals – that
is, towards organic or ecologi-cal agriculture. After the CPAM process, PAN
AP’s partner Vikalpani, the Sri Lankan Women’s Federation, was motivated to
work with PAN AP to organize a series of training workshops on organic farming
for its members, many of whom are now practising organic agriculture in their
home gardens and in their rice fields.

PAN AP has been a strong
advocate for small-farm BEA as a sustainable alternative to the toxic model of
modern agriculture. BEA is also a fundamental component of food sovereignty. It
provides sustainable livelihoods for small farming communities and strengthens
community resilience in coping with climate change. It is one of the Five
Pillars of Rice Wisdom that form the foundation of PAN AP’s Save Our Rice
campaign, launched in 2003. With the global food, financial and climate crises
which emerged in 2008, the importance of BEA in sustaining the food security
and food sover-eignty of small, vulnerable rice communities all over Asia took
on greater urgency. Thus, capacity-building has featured largely in our
activities in recent years as a focus area that contributed significantly
towards community resilience and sustainable development.

We
identified the System of Rice Intensification (SRI) as an impor-tant BEA
technology for sustainable livelihoods. This was because SRI had proven to
reduce production costs while increasing yields and net incomes significantly
in several Asian countries over the past three decades. Two regional workshops
for network partners and farmers from eight Asian countries were organized in
Cambodia and India, with partner organizations Centre d’Etude et de
DéveloppementAgricole Cambodgien (CEDAC) and Kudumbam respectively
actingas trainers due to their expertise in SRI. Another regional
training programme on farmer empowerment, seed breeding and climate change
adaptation using diversified integrated farming systems was organized for
partners and farmers from 11 countries to meet the need for rice communities to
learn to organize themselves, save seeds and adapt to climate change. This
training was conducted by MASIPAG, a farmer-scientist partnership for
development in the Philippines, due to its expertise in the areas of focus.
These were fundamental areas for the sustainable
development of poor rural communities.

Indigenous
women preparing a nursery bed as part of the BEA training in Sarawak.

Having close network
partners with BEA expertise has been very significant and a major strength for
our network. With these partners, we have managed more effectively to meet the
needs of our other network partners and the sectors both we and they serve.
Other than training, such partners have also helped us to develop important
factsheets on BEA and farmer empowerment, which have been translated by network
partners into local languages to strengthen their BEA sustainability
initiatives.

We also responded to local
needs for capacity-build-ing in BEA where local communities were found to be
struggling with low yields and incomes. Local indigenous communities in East
Malaysia and small rice farmers in Andhra Pradesh and Uttarakhand, India,
received special hands-on training in BEA and SRI skills.

All the BEA projects were
very much appreciated by the participants, who said they had gained a lot from
the training and who continue to practise and benefit from their new skills.
Trainees have reported gains such as minimizing pest attacks by using organic
pesticides they have learned to make. They have also achieved improved yields,
better incomes and a more diversified diet (for example from kitchen gardens),
and have even increased their adaptive capacity to climate change. Seed
breeding techniques learned from MASIPAG have been upscaled at the local level
in several countries, including Indonesia, Nepal, Cambodia and India.

PAN
AP works with marginalized groups to ensure food security and a healthy
environment farmer
said of the MASIPAG training: “It widened my vision and knowledge in terms of
the role of local rice seeds for farmers.” Meanwhile, network partners have
shared how these initiatives have helped them build capacity to upscale BEA
initiatives at the local level and empowered local communities to do better.

The capacity-building activities have facilitated the
upscaling of BEA practices; built BEA skills among farmers, non-governmental
organi-zation (NGO) staff, agricultural extension workers and others; and
supported local action and network building. Collectively, the activities have
significantly contributed to the sustainable human development of small rice
farming communities in various countries in Asia.

In 2009, the rice fields of Yunnan, China, were destroyed
by the rice plant hopper and we collaborated with our network partner in
Yunnan, the Pesticide Eco-Alternatives Center (PEAC), to address the situation.
A short study was carried out, followed by a cross-country workshop on the
results, involving NGOs, academics, scientists and policymakers from China,
Vietnam, Laos and Burma. In addition, we produced factsheets on the rice plant
hopper and Integrated Pest Management. All these efforts were timely responses
by PAN AP and PEAC to the crisis, to convince agriculturalists and policymakers
that the use of pesticides actually exacerbates rice plant hopper attacks and
is unsustainable, whereas BEA methods are effective and sustainable in dealing
with pests.